dora_da_destroyer
Master Baker
we've been discussing it for 100 years because no one wants to actually do it/people don't agree on how to do it. even FDR who probably had the freest reigns of any modern president had to drop it to get the conservative support he needed to pass the SS Act.
Don't get hung up on the examples I gave...I was just throwing shyt out there that's considered leftist.
But SSDI, for example, started in 1956 and there was nothing that preceded it besides conversation.
We've been conversing about guaranteed healthcare for 100 years almost.
My point is that
1) M4A can get done if the political will is there and
2) I don't think that passing Left legislation has historically happened in baby steps
What are our most robust leftist policies ? I'll look em up to see
as for most robust leftist policies, i'd go with a lot of legislation passed by both the Roosevelt's and LBJ
- Teddy with the fair employment act, trust busting, created the national parks system and other conservation efforts, i also think it was him who desegregated fed govt employees
- FDR - basically all the new deal/safety net legislation
- LBJ - civil and voting rights acts, gun control, wanted to start a war on poverty - some legislation for this passed like medicare, but Nixon winning and a bad economy in the 70's stopped the momentum of this movement



